Comments

That javascript debugger in Konqueror is a _great_ idea and that finance application in KDE CVS would be _really_ cool, but as already said by developer the new proposed tabs look needs to be improved.

I have been thinking that perhaps there should be a khome:
Bookcase, Album, Khacc, etc.etc.
Perhaps tie things together so that when a book/music/video/etc is added to khacc, then it also asks if users wants it in bookcase.
How about an insurance type program that uses album for storing pix into?

According to the "release schedule" document, the decision on whether to release 3.1 was supposed to happen yesterday. Just wondering about that one.

But the bigger issue to me is.... what's the status of the Kroupware project? I thought it was supposed to release at the end of next month. With a really big, and paying customer... I'm just interested in knowing how this team is doing.

Anybody know of a way to either launch a Konqueror window with no menubars whatsoever and accessing an html on the harddrive? Or alternatly, to execute javascript *without* a konqueror instance already running?

Qtella (qtella.sf.net) already has very nice tabs with close buttons on them. That might work as a starting point... (Qtella has a very nice interface, this screenshot from their site does *not* do it justice).

Let me guess, you didn't look at the bug comments on http://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46726 did you? Please read my comment on the bottom of that page.
This also applies to all future comments about tabs in Konqueror :)

Read the note on the bug report regarding the single glyph situation. I don't know what the QTab stuff is capable of, or what replacement plans are in place, but...

You might want to check out the close button functionality of the truly excellent "multizilla" (http://multizilla.mozdev.org/) chrome for mozilla. It uses the favicon glyph on the tab, but when you hover over the tab it changes to a "x" close button... extremely convenient, and looks great (you don't have to be looking at a dozen redundant "x" buttons on every tab, yet the functionality is on each tab which is more convenient than a close button off to the side).

Sorry - I think I got confused with another thread wherein somebody was having trouble compiling Qtella and attributed it to Redhat. Never mind - I've never used RH 8 and have no opinion one way or the other on it... I was just suggesting a distro very similar that compiles things correctly out of the box. This guy didn't have any problems compiling... I just had problems keeping my discussion threads straight. :)

>Not true.
>KDE3.0.5 for stable and unstable
>apt-get able from download.kde.org or one of its mirrors.

Unofficial packages. there are no official KDE3 packages because "Debian is about to migrate to GCC3.2". And before that it was because "Debian is about to migrate to Xfree 4.2" (Well, Debian got Xfree 4.2 only 9 months late)

Luckily I'm about to move to Gentoo. At least they have cutting-edge software (something that used to be true for Debian as well).

If I have correctly understood, koffice only features apps that help you create a document. Kexi will be included because it can help you merge database information into a document like a letter or - I guess - a spreadsheet.

Khacc, although it might be a great app, isn't aimed at document creation. So, like David sayed, it would be great to have it in KDE CVS but not in koffice CVS.

Just wanted to say big thanks for bring us KC KDE again. Without it, I have little idea of what's going on since I don;t really have the time to read everything. the summary that is KC is hugely appreciated.

I submitted the last two KC KDE's to linuxtoday.com myself and they ignored me. I don't why are they doing this, or why aren't they posting it when submitted by someone else. I'll probably email them sometime this week to ask about it.